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The Lands of Scripture

187+ locations — explore where the biblical story unfolded, from the Garden of Eden to Rome.

All RegionsCanaanEgyptJudeaGalileeSamariaMesopotamiaAsia MinorGreeceRomeArabia

187 places

Abel-meholah

Jordan ValleyJordan Valley (site uncertain)

The Jordan Valley town where Elisha was plowing when Elijah called him to be a prophet.

Meadow of dancing

Achmetha (Ecbatana)

MediaHamadan, Iran

The Median capital where the scroll of Cyrus’s decree to rebuild the temple was found.

Admah

Plain of JordanSouthern Dead Sea region (debated)

One of the five cities of the plain, overthrown with Sodom and Gomorrah.

Red earth, ground

Adullam

Shephelah of JudahKhirbet esh-Sheikh Madhkur, Israel (probable)

The cave stronghold where David gathered his band of outlaws and mighty men.

Ai

Canaan (near Bethel)Et-Tell / Khirbet el-Maqatir (debated), West Bank

The town near Bethel where Abraham pitched his tent — and where Israel later met defeat, then victory, under Joshua.

The ruin, the heap

Anathoth

BenjaminAnata, West Bank

The priestly town of Benjamin — the home of the prophet Jeremiah.

Antioch in Pisidia

Pisidia (Asia Minor)Yalvaç, Turkey

The Asia Minor city where Paul preached his great synagogue sermon and turned to the Gentiles.

Named for Antiochus

Antioch of Syria

SyriaAntakya, Turkey

The city in Syria where believers were first called "Christians" (Acts 11:26). It became the launching point for Paul's three missionary journeys and was a major center of the early Gentile church.

Named for Antiochus, a Seleucid royal name

Aphek

Sharon plainTel Afek (Antipatris), Israel

Where the Philistines mustered and captured the ark of God from Israel.

Fortress; riverbed

Arad

The NegevTel Arad, Israel

The Canaanite city of the Negev whose king attacked Israel — and whose destruction gave a place its name.

Ashdod

PhilistiaAshdod, Israel

The Philistine city where the captured ark toppled the idol Dagon.

Fortress, stronghold

Ashkelon

PhilistiaAshkelon, Israel

The Philistine seaport on the Mediterranean — where Samson struck down thirty men.

Athens

Achaia (Greece)Athens, Greece

The great Greek city of philosophers where Paul preached the unknown God at the Areopagus.

Named for the goddess Athena

Baal-peor (Mount Peor)

MoabHeights of Moab, near Mount Nebo, Jordan

The Moabite height where Balaam blessed Israel — and where Israel fell into idolatry and immorality.

Peor = "opening, cleft"; Baal-peor = "lord of Peor"

Baal-zephon

By the Red SeaNear the Red Sea crossing (uncertain)

The landmark — likely a shrine of a sea-god — opposite Israel’s last camp before the crossing.

Lord of the north (a Canaanite deity)

Babylon

MesopotamiaNear Hillah, Iraq

The capital of the Babylonian Empire that destroyed Jerusalem and the Temple in 586 BC and took Judah into captivity. A symbol of worldly power and rebellion against God throughout Scripture.

Confusion (Hebrew Babel); Akkadian "gate of god"

Bashan

Bashan (Transjordan)Hauran / Golan, southern Syria

The fertile northern Transjordan kingdom of the giant Og — proverbial for its strong cattle and great oaks.

Fertile plain (traditional)

Beer-lahai-roi

The NegevThe Negev (between Kadesh and Bered)

The desert well where Hagar met the God who sees — and where Isaac later made his home.

The well of the Living One who sees me

Beersheba

The NegevBeersheba (Tel Be’er Sheva), Israel

The southern frontier town of wells and oaths, marking the edge of the Promised Land — "from Dan to Beersheba."

Well of the oath / well of seven

Berea

MacedoniaVeria, Greece

The Macedonian town whose "noble" people searched the Scriptures daily to test Paul’s message.

Beth-horon

Ephraim / Benjamin borderBeit Ur, West Bank

The mountain pass where God cast down great hailstones on the fleeing Amorite kings.

House of Horon (a deity) / house of the hollow

Beth-shean

Jezreel / Jordan ValleyBeit She’an (Tel Beth-Shean), Israel

The valley fortress on whose wall the Philistines displayed the bodies of Saul and his sons.

House of (the god) Shan

Beth-shemesh

Judah / Dan borderTel Beth-Shemesh, Israel

The Israelite town to which the ark returned, drawn by cows on a new cart from Philistia.

House of the sun

Bethany

JudeaAl-Eizariya, West Bank

The village near Jerusalem, home of Mary, Martha, and Lazarus, where Jesus raised the dead.

House of dates / house of affliction

Bethel

EphraimBeitin, West Bank

Where Jacob dreamed of a ladder to heaven — later a chief sanctuary, and then a centre of idolatry.

House of God

Bethlehem

JudahBethlehem, West Bank

The city of David and the birthplace of Jesus Christ, fulfilling the prophecy of Micah 5:2. A small town about 6 miles south of Jerusalem.

House of Bread

Bethsaida

Galilee (Gaulanitis)Et-Tell, Israel (probable)

The fishing town by the Sea of Galilee — home of Peter, Andrew, and Philip.

House of fishing

Bozrah

EdomBuseirah, Jordan

The chief city of Edom, named in the prophets’ oracles of judgment and of the LORD’s coming vengeance.

Sheepfold, fortress

Caesarea

Samaria (coast)Caesarea Maritima (ruins), Israel

The Roman provincial capital on the coast — where the gospel first reached the Gentiles and Paul was imprisoned.

Named in honour of Caesar

Caesarea Philippi

Gaulanitis (near Mount Hermon)Banias, Golan Heights

The town at the foot of Mount Hermon where Peter confessed Jesus as the Christ.

Caesarea of Philip

Cana of Galilee

GalileeKafr Kanna, Israel (traditional)

The Galilean village where Jesus turned water into wine — the first of his miraculous signs.

Place of reeds

Capernaum

GalileeKfar Nahum (ruins), Israel

The fishing town on the Sea of Galilee that Jesus made the base of his Galilean ministry — "his own city."

Village of Nahum

Carchemish

On the EuphratesJerablus, Syria (and Karkamış, Turkey)

The Euphrates stronghold where Nebuchadnezzar crushed Egypt — the battle that gave Babylon the world.

Cave of Machpelah

Hebron, CanaanCave of the Patriarchs, Hebron

The cave Abraham bought at Hebron as a burial place — the tomb of the patriarchs and their wives.

Double (cave)

Cenchrea

Achaia (port of Corinth)Kechries, Greece

The eastern harbour of Corinth, with its own church and the deaconess Phoebe.

Chorazin

GalileeKhirbet Kerazeh, Israel

A Galilean town near Capernaum on which Jesus pronounced a woe for unbelief.

Colossae

Asia (Lycus valley)Near Honaz, Turkey

The Lycus-valley town to which Paul wrote Colossians, exalting the supremacy of Christ.

Corinth

AchaiaAncient Corinth (ruins), Greece

The wealthy, cosmopolitan Greek port where Paul founded a church and to which he wrote 1 & 2 Corinthians.

Crete

Mediterranean islandCrete, Greece

The Mediterranean island Paul’s ship sheltered along — where he later left Titus to order the churches.

Cyprus

Mediterranean islandCyprus

The Mediterranean island home of Barnabas — first stop of Paul’s first missionary journey.

Copper (the island named the metal)

Damascus

Aram (Syria)Damascus, Syria

The ancient Syrian capital on the road to which Saul of Tarsus met the risen Christ and became Paul.

Well-watered (traditional)

Dan (Laish)

The far north (Laish)Tel Dan, Israel

The northernmost city of Israel — conquered by the migrating Danites and later a centre of idolatry.

Judge

Debir (Kirjath-sepher)

Hill country of JudahKhirbet Rabud, West Bank (probable)

The hill-country city, once "city of the book," won by Othniel — who gained Achsah as his bride.

Sanctuary / oracle; old name = "city of the book"

Derbe

Lycaonia (Asia Minor)Kerti Höyük area, Turkey (probable)

The Lycaonian city where Paul made many disciples — the turning point of his first journey.

Dibon

MoabDhiban, Jordan

A chief city of Moab — and the find-spot of the famous Moabite Stone (Mesha Stele).

Dothan

Hill country of SamariaTell Dothan, West Bank

The pasture town where Joseph was sold by his brothers — and where Elisha later saw the hills full of fire.

Two wells / cisterns

Edrei

BashanDera’a, southern Syria

The city of Bashan where Israel defeated the giant king Og.

Egypt

North AfricaEgypt

A major empire of the ancient world. Israel was enslaved there for 430 years before the Exodus. Egypt also served as a place of refuge for Abraham, Jacob's family, and the infant Jesus.

Hebrew Mitzrayim

Ekron

PhilistiaTel Miqne, Israel

The northernmost Philistine city — last stop of the ark, and shrine of Baal-zebub.

Uprooting / barren place

Elam

South-west PersiaKhuzestan, south-west Iran

The ancient kingdom east of Babylon — homeland of Susa, and a nation under the prophets’ oracles.

Elim

Sinai PeninsulaWadi Gharandel, Sinai (traditional)

The desert oasis of twelve springs and seventy palm trees where Israel rested.

Great trees / palms

Emmaus

JudeaEmmaus-Nicopolis, Israel (traditional; debated)

The village on the road to which the risen Jesus was made known in the breaking of bread.

Warm springs

En-gedi

Wilderness by the Dead SeaEin Gedi, Israel

The Dead Sea oasis where David spared Saul’s life in the cave.

Spring of the kid (young goat)

Endor

Issachar (by the Jezreel Valley)Ein Dor area, Israel

The village where the desperate King Saul sought out a medium on the eve of his death.

Spring of Dor

Ephesus

Asia MinorEphesus (ruins) near Selçuk, Turkey

The great city of Asia, home of the temple of Artemis, where Paul ministered for three years.

Erech (Uruk)

Shinar (Mesopotamia)Warka (Uruk), Iraq

One of the first cities of Nimrod’s kingdom in the land of Shinar — the ancient Uruk.

Etham

Edge of the wildernessEastern edge of the Egyptian delta (uncertain)

The camp "in the edge of the wilderness" where the pillar of cloud and fire led Israel.

Euphrates River

MesopotamiaEuphrates (Firat / Al-Furat)

The greatest river of the Bible — a river of Eden and the promised northern boundary of the land.

Ezion-geber

Edom (Red Sea)Head of the Gulf of Aqaba (Eilat / Aqaba)

A wilderness station on the Red Sea — later the seaport from which Solomon’s fleet sailed for Ophir.

Gadara (the Gadarenes)

Decapolis (east of the Sea of Galilee)Umm Qais, Jordan (and the eastern lakeshore)

The country east of the Sea of Galilee where Jesus cast a legion of demons into a herd of swine.

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